 Amount set aside for 12 civil-support teams to
help first responders in the event of a chemical,
biological or nuclear attack by terrorists: $88.4 million.

 Number of major chemical facilities nationwide: 15,000.

 If attacked, the number of those facilities that would endanger the lives of a million or more Americans: 100.

 Number of the government-appointed Defense Policy Board members out of 30 who were linked to companies that have won more than $76 billion in defense contracts
in 2001 and 2002: 9.

 Requested down payment in 2002 for the Pentagons
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agencies Total Information Awareness System (TIPS), a system that allows the government to study the purchases and activities of its citizens: $200 million.

 When it was defunded: March 2003.

 Percentage of Americans TIPS sought to turn into snitches
before it was dismantled: one in 24.

 Right after 9/11, percentage of Americans who favored
putting Arabs under special surveillance like that used against Japanese-Americans during World War II: 32.

 Number of days Nacer Fathi Mustafa and his father,
both American citizens of Palestinian descent, were held in a Texas jail after being falsely accused on September 15, 2001, of altering their passports: 67.

 Number of countries whose citizens are required to register
with the Bush Administrations National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS): 25.

 Number of people who have registered across the country with NSEERS: 138,053.

 Total number of men and boys who showed up at immigration offices to register for NSEERS: 82,414.

 Total number of men and boys detained after registering for NSEERS: 2,747.

 Number of those subjected to enforcement actions: 739.

 Number of those who were considered by the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services as criminals: 130.

 Number of those held in custody: 114.

 Total number linked to terrorism: 11.

 Estimated number of Iranians arrested in Los Angeles by
the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services as part of NSEERS: 700.

 Number of illegal immigrants removed from the
United States in March 2003: 14,137.

 Number of those considered criminals by the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services: 5,818.

 Number deported: 3,556.

 Number deemed inadmissible: 10,581.

 Number of immigration inspections in March 2003
in the U.S.: 34,941,527.

 Number of inspections conducted at airports: 5,941,752.

 Number of inspections conducted at land
borders: 27,274,733.

 Number of inspections conducted at sea: 1,239,029.

 Number of applications for asylum in March 2003: 4,670.

 Number of applications for asylum approved: 1,141.

 Number of applications for asylum denied: 1,252.

 Country that submitted the most asylum applications: Indonesia.

 From January to August 2002, the number of no match
letters the Social Security Administration sent out to employers asking them to explain why names and numbers of their employees didnt match: 800,000.

 Estimated number of immigrant workers who lost their
jobs because of Operation Tarmac raids at airports, the new citizenship requirements for screeners and Social Security no match letters: 10,000.

 In L.A., the number of employees out of 150 at Super Assi Market who lost their jobs after receiving Social Security Administration no match letters in August 2002: 60.

 Number of applications to surveil suspected
foreign-intelligence and terrorist targets under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in 2000: 1,012.

 Number of applications approved in 2002: 1,228.

 Number of FISA warrants challenged by federal
judges in 2002: 2.

 Number of times the FISA court has admonished the FBI
for misrepresenting facts since 9/11: 75.

 Number of terrorist attacks around the world in 2001: 355.

 Number of terrorist attacks around the world in 2002: 199.

 Number of deaths due to terrorist attacks: 725.

 Number of people killed in the terrorist bombing at the nightclub in Bali: 200.

 Number of Iraqi civilians killed during the
recent war: 3,240.

 Number of Afghan civilians killed during the
2001 war: 1,800.

 New name of the Immigration and Naturalization Service:
Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services.

 Number of foreign nationals inspected at LAX
in 2000: 4,465,206.

 Number of foreign nationals inspected at LAX
in 2001: 4,330,501.

 Number of foreign nationals inspected at LAX
in 2002: 3,655,193.

 Number of applicants refused entry at LAX  excluding
people who claimed asylum, parole cases or those subjected to deferred inspection in 2000: 3,161.

 Number of similar applicants refused entry at LAX
in 2001: 3,015.

 Number of similar applicants refused entry at LAX
in 2002: 3,797.

 Number of Japanese rounded up  most of them U.S.
citizens  on the West Coast during World War II: 120,000.

 Number of allegedly subversive aliens President
Woodrow Wilsons attorney general, A. Mitchell Palmer, rounded up for deportation during the Palmer raids: 3,000.

 Number of suspected al Qaeda members the U.S. claims it
has detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba: 680.

 Number of prisoners under monitoring by a psychiatrist
in the newly opened mental ward at Guantánamo Bay: 24.

 Number of hours prisoners were handcuffed, shackled,
made to wear mittens, surgical masks and ear muffs, and blindfolded by the use of taped-over ski goggles during their flight to Guantánamo Bay: 22.

 Amount the NYPD spends per day on security
since 9/11: $700,000.

 Number of full- and part-time airport screeners at
420 U.S. airports: 55,600.

 Number of screeners Congress has sought to
limit the work force to: 50,000.

 Number of passenger and baggage screeners employed
by LAX as of June 5, 2003: 2,695.

 Number of those recently fired for poor performance: 360.

 Average hourly wage for screeners nationwide: $13 to $14.

 Number of health-care workers Bush announced
would be given the first set of shots to protect against an intentional release of the smallpox virus: 500,000.

 Number of hospitals nationwide that refused to
participate: 80.

 In the 90 days after 9/11, the number of anthrax scares
in the L.A. Unified School District: 33.

 Yearly salary Donald Rumsfeld was making while a
board member of ABB, the engineering company that won a $200 million contract to provide the design and key
components of two light-water nuclear reactors to North Korea in 2000: $190,000.

 Average pay increase of defense-company CEOs from 2001 to 2002: 79 percent.

 Average pay increase of company CEOs from 2001 to 2002: 6 percent.

 Pay increase of the CEO of Lockheed Martin, the countrys largest defense contractor: 400 percent.

 The distance from which the Pentagon wants to be able
to identify people with its new radar-based device that identifies people by the way they walk: 500 feet.

 Amount U.S. government agencies have spent in the
past five years on camera surveillance technology
 with a notable increase in spending proposals
after 9/11: $50 million.

 Percentage funneled toward facial-recognition
programs: 90.

 Percentage of the time that face-recognition biometric technology turned up false positives in matching scans with a database according to a study by the National Institute for Standards in Technology: 43.

 Cost of the proposed national-identity-card
system: $4 billion.

 Amount the 9/11 Independent Commission originally
received to explore the causes of the attacks: $3 million.